Abstract

ABSTRACTBackground: Little is known about the long-term effects of early childhood undernutrition on adolescent cardiovascular disease risk and educational performance in low-income countries. We examined this in a rural Ugandan population.Objective: To investigate if stunting or wasting among children aged 2–5 years is associated with cardiovascular disease risk or educational achievement during adolescence.Methods: We conducted analyses using data from a cohort of children followed from early childhood to adolescence. Weight and height were measured in 1999–2000 when the children were 2–5 years of age and repeated in 2004/2005 and 2011. We compared cardiovascular disease risk parameters (mean blood pressure, lipids, HbA1c) and schooling years achieved in 2011 among 1054 adolescents categorised into four groups: those who experienced stunting or wasting throughout follow-up; those who recovered from stunting or wasting; those who were normal but later became stunted or wasted; and those who never experienced stunting or wasting from childhood up to adolescence. We controlled for possible confounding using multiple generalised linear regression models along with Generalised Estimating Equations to account for clustering of children within households.Results: Wasting was negatively associated with systolic blood pressure (−7.90 95%CI [−14.52,-1.28], p = 0.02) and diastolic blood pressure (−3.92, 95%CI [−7.42, −0.38], p = 0.03). Stunting had borderline negative association with systolic blood pressure (−2.90, 95%CI [−6.41, 0.61] p = 0.10). Recovery from wasting was positively associated with diastolic blood pressure (1.93, 95%CI [0.11, 3.74] p = 0.04). Stunting or wasting was associated with fewer schooling years.Conclusion: Recovery from wasting rather than just an episode in early childhood is associated with a rise in blood pressure while educational achievement is compromised regardless of whether recovery from undernutrition happens. These findings are relevant to children exposed to undernutrition in low-income settings.

Highlights

  • Little is known about the long-term effects of early childhood undernutrition on adolescent cardiovascular disease risk and educational performance in low-income countries

  • The General Population cohort (GPC) was established by the British Medical Research Council (MRC) in 1989 mainly to study HIV infection trends and risk factors in rural Uganda [24]

  • Compared to children who remained normal, children who remained stunted up to adolescence achieved less schooling years (−2.82, 95%CI [−5.48, −0.70] p = 0.04) and had some evidence of a borderline negative correlation between stunting and systolic blood pressure (−2.90, 95%CI [−6.41, 0.61] p = 0.10)

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Summary

Introduction

Little is known about the long-term effects of early childhood undernutrition on adolescent cardiovascular disease risk and educational performance in low-income countries. We examined this in a rural Ugandan population. Objective: To investigate if stunting or wasting among children aged 2–5 years is associated with cardiovascular disease risk or educational achievement during adolescence. Conclusion: Recovery from wasting rather than just an episode in early childhood is associated with a rise in blood pressure while educational achievement is compromised regardless of whether recovery from undernutrition happens These findings are relevant to children exposed to undernutrition in low-income settings.

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